It’s a query that occurs with increasing frequency as Election Day draws closer — and a matter worth mulling now that Moderate Mitt is re-emerging from mothballs.
Deep down, what does Romney really believe? If you’ve watched him run as a progressive Republican, as he did in 1994 against Ted Kennedy, and then as a moderate Republican, as he did in his 2002 gubernatorial campaign, then as a self-proclaimed conservative in the GOP primaries, that’s a very real and perplexing question.

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I think Mitt is in the end a pragmatist. That is why he worked well with the left wing Massachusetts legislature. He can stand on principle, but has the ability to play nice with all sides-the left wing Democrats as well as the right wing Republicans. Contrast that with our current president, who cannot work with the opposition, and who then skips the whole legislative process, and rewrites laws himself. And this guy used to be a constitutional law lecturer! NEW PARAGRAPH: It is a common thread to use the abortion issue to illustrate Romney's lack of core values. But why is this test never put to the Democrats? Bill Clinton, Al Gore and Joe Biden all began life in politics as pro life. But their switch is never questioned. Why is that?
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You must have missed the debate. Biden's position hasn't changed. He still follows the same old mytical teachings. He is opposed to abortion, for himself and his family. He however refuses to dictate to me and to you what you must believe. Still can only see out of your "right" eye apparently.
First of all Mitt doesn't believe in anything to be quite frank. Second I don't have a big problem with that. There is very little I believe in whole heartedly. Mitt's problem is there is nothing he really opposses either. He is a man who does not "want" to be President of these United States, he "needs" to be. It is not about a desire to take the country somewhere it is about Mitt. Mitt likes to say he worked with the Mass. Democratic legislature. I lived in Mass. when Mitt was governor. I can only recall one piece of legislation he got through, Romneycare. Everything else was passed in the legislature over his veto. His record in Mass. was so poor he didn't run for re-election. His favorable when he left was 34 percent. The man couldn't have won re-election. How's he doing in the Presidential race in Mass? He's not even competeing.
Mitt I honestly believe is a psychologically flawed candidate. He finds himself constantly being accused of flip-flopping and has done it so often no one no longer takes offense. I have consistently said I am biased. I do not like Mitt Romney the man. He publicly shows a deep seated lack of integrity, a personality not fully formed. I won't vote for Mitt because I don't like him. It's not policy. It's the man.
When the overly-long ordeal of present day presidential politics began for this election, I knew I was unlikely to vote for a Republican because of the platform. I didn't have any particular opinion about Romney the man. Over the course of the marathon, as Mitt's personality has been exposed, it is now clear. I totally agree with the premise that his personality is not fully formed. And it is equally clear to me that part of his deficit involves an inability to truly empathize with other people in the way that I believe is necessary for a President. It isn't acceptable for someone who does anything other than ship jobs overseas. Mitt already found his calling. Overstuff his own bank account at the expense of vast numbers of his fellow American citizens. He's the poster boy for the need for reform of the entire tax code. Not only does the personal income tax code need changing, but taxes as it relates to corporate incentives for offshore labor, and virtually every other corner of a system that has been rigged for the 1%. Yes, I agree that it has become personal for me as well.
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And we go back to our Congress.It's a problem when considering a vote for Romney and its a huge problem when considering a vote for Scot Brown.
Our post-Obama, conservative backlash against the Other, and the "he's-not-one-of-us" mentality brings us right into this mess.
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Romney believes he should be president and will say absolutely anything to get people to vote for him. Ultimately I don't believe I have much to fear from a Romney presidency as his tenure in MA showed, but I do have a lot to fear with the GOP in control of the decisions that affect my wife, mother, and daughter. The GOP of today is in the thrall of an American taliban, and unless they can re-center their once-great party they, or the American people, will suffer.
We know what Mitt believes in; it's in a video file; he thinks most of us are freeloaders and dead beats. That is the real Mitt. It will be a shameful day if he is elected Plutocrat of the United States.
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System-Republicans are hostage takers, some are certainly my enimies, pigs are nice, smart and harmless and should be insulted to be compared to Palin. Democrats need to get up in fools' faces and it is decidedly American to acknowledge the benifits rich people derive from our infrastructure of laws, roads and bridges. Have a good one!
A politician that signs Grover Norquist's pledge becomes beholden to Grover Norquist. They are no longer able to think first about the state that elected them, only about the pledge. Voters should reject any politician who is willing to be beholden first to Grover Norquist.
Don't forget he also signed the National Organization on Marriage pledge. http://www.nomblog.com/12150/
In signing NOM's marriage pledge, Mitt Romney, Michelle Bachman and Rick Santorum pledged to:
Guys, I'd be very interested to hear from Romney supporters about what they consider his core beliefs. It really is a mystery to me, even on economics, where he gives voice to the official freshwater doctrines, but then on unguarded moments, seems like a closet Keynesian. Scot
What are Obama's core beliefs ?
All I hear is higher taxes, investment (which is also higher taxes) and you didn't built that.
As a small business person I'm #$#$# sick of being demonized by Obama and Warren.
One hard tax comment from Romney was capping deductions - great idea - simple - and if will effect us in Massachusetts.
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Waytoo: This is an adult conversation today. If you want to participate, please use your big boy voice.
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Good luck with that, Scot. You may have to use a time-out.
I think one of the problems is that Romney actually has a record of 20 years that you can go back and parse and wonder about. Obama had no such record, or at least it was ignored/buried. Obama is allowed to "evolve" and have his words put "in context" when he shows his true colors yet Romney is held to a much higher standard. In the end, I think he will stand up and he is more a centrist, especially compared to far left Obama and Pelosi, Reid, and Schumer crew. How come Obama does not get questioned on why he does not stand up to them?
The true character of Romney is the countless selfless stories about him. Is he tough - you do not get to the top of Bain w/out being VERY smart and VERY tough.
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"Born on third base and thinks he hit a home run" describes Romney's tough climb. And here's system, trying to correct Ryan's dropping the ball on women last night.
Scot - OT - the jay Greene article did have some good points. The one thing he does not point out is the power of the unions. Membership grows, dues grows, clout grows. No way they would like to substitute ATM technology (yes a dig at Obama) for dues paying members. Also, investment has increased greatly as well. Ther ewill be no change until we can figure out a way to get the unions out of the middle. Unions, not teachers.
All the unions, all together cannot possibly match the unlimited influence of big business, now that corporations are people. The union bogeyman argument is dead.
not in education which the article was about. In wsj.
Begolf: True, Mitt has a record, but as someone who has backed Mitt in the past and thought he was a very good candidate, my problem is that he has abandoned (or at very least, temporarily orphaned) much of what made him seem like a good candidate to me. Which only reinforced my question: What, down deep, does he really believe? Beyond the broadbrush stuff in today's column, I honestly don't know.
I read a good description of Romney's approach, fwiw. Forget who said it, but they said given his business background (consulting, PE), he has encountered different problems and has to approach each one differently. WHile that works in biz, especially consulting and PE, maybe that style is what causes the confusion.
It's simple. Romney believes in a good job for Romney. He has money, now he needs adulation, to go down in history. He needs the top job in the land. So how he does it is obviously secondary. That's why all the retractions, shifts. His own party didn't even like him in the primaries for this reason. As it happened, the other candidates were worse, luckily for Mitt. You notice now system's here with the "shape shifter" stuff. The old GOP game, turn the tables.
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system is beginning to sound a lot like one of those little yappy lap dogs that never shuts up but nobody takes it seriously either...lots of noise but hardly any substance.
I appreciate some of the more toned-down commentary today. And in the spirit of offering an olive-branch to the red jerseys, I would fully agree that Obama is not perfect, in any number of ways. And yes, he should be accountable for his decisions. But any accounting of any politician is only going to happen in the context of the biases of the person doing the accounting. The extremes on either side of the debate are going to have quite different tallies as to the deficits of the politician. To the extent that Mr. Romney is clearly documented as being a moving target regarding his position on a lengthy list of topics, this should give his home team just as much concern as it does the opposing team. I come away with this notion. I can be sympathetic, philosophically, to the vague parameters of individual responsibility and small government which are invoked by the republicans. I think more often than not those positions get stretched too far away from the equally important attention to community which is on the other side of the debate. The Republican platform is Exhibit A of that problem. Their candidate, Romney, fails to offer a strong, clear voice which intelligently formulates the issues. As I said earlier, I believe that is because of fundamental failings in him as an individual. But as I step back from all of the conversation about the two candidates, I also am reminded of the fact that neither one of them will be operating in a vacuum. The system is such that the President is only one voice among many.
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System--an actual comment I was able to read through entirely, kudos to you as well. I'll say in reality it's entirely possible that Romney was in fact the most liberal option of the group, but if so he certainly wasn't playing that role in the GOP nomination process. Because if he had, he would have been right there with Huntsman being dropped and leaving the GOP with Cain, Perry, Santorum, Bachmann, Gingrich... all of which make me shudder as presidential options. Either Mormon in the race would have been superior to any of the rest of the pack, but Mitt, just like McCain last time around, has basically backed away from everything I approved of them for, and tried to kiss up to the extreme wing of the party because not doing so last time out kept them from being nominated. The chosen method for the GOP nomination process is to be as extreme right-wing neocon as possible, preferably with as little apparent insanity (or apparently groping) as possible. So Romney took off his moderate mask, and put on his neocon mask. But nobody really sees what's underneath the masks, which is basically the point of the piece.
“He believes in fiscal responsibility and balanced budgets,” says a former adviser. “Beyond that, he doesn’t have many ideological beliefs." The accumulation of wealth is the highest achievement man can attain on earth before ascending to the Planet Kolob to dwell with the Heavenly Father for eternity.
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It would seem to me that in the AAA game last night Biden edged Ryan although his obnoxious antics made me sick. Romney is at his core a realist. He is a numbers guy and thats why he hammered Obama in the main event, substance and style over a guy without a speech. The suggestion that he could, even if he wanted to, go after the mortgage interest deduction is laughable. All he needs to do is keep the focus on his plan, you know that thing the president does not have.
The real difference here is that Romney and Ryan showed up to debate the issues and put forward their plans to fix the many problems that we have. Obama stared at his shoes and couldnt remember why in 4 years he has been unable to accomplish anything on the economic front. Biden put on an act to rally the troops. He showed a very good command of the "stage" but he didnt debate. He tried to scare people into continuing down his see nothing/do nothing approach and hope our problems go away.
Anybody would be better than the empty suit Obama is. Or is Obama an empty chair? Or is Obama an empty teleprompter??!? Anyway, it should be obvious after four years: Anyone But Obama.
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For the next debate the Democrats need to have the president play sick and put in Biden. Romney would eat his lunch. The other way to get the president interested would be to have him pretend he is on one of his talk shows like ellen or letterman. Pop Tv seems to motivate this guy to at least be awake. Granted he doesnt need to think, which is a weak point but the excitement level will be there for him.
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Slick Mitt believes in whatever will make the sale.
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Good article, Scot -- and I like the way you participate in the comments.
I would love to see a comparable article: What Does Obama really Believe?
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So write it yourself, golfballs...oh, that's right...nobody cares what you think.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/01/opinion/sunday/a-quantum-theory-of-mitt-romney.html?_r=0